In this Qi Men Dun Jia lesson, Mr. Dougles Chan analyzes an urgent health divination case. A client sends a message early in the morning saying that her husband has suffered a heart attack. The question is whether he can survive the situation, and how the chart should be read when the matter is serious, urgent, and emotionally difficult.
This lesson is for Qi Men Dun Jia learning purposes only. It is not medical advice and should never replace emergency treatment, hospital care, or professional medical judgment. In a real heart attack case, the person must receive immediate help from qualified doctors.
The first teaching point is subject identification. The wife is the asker, but the husband is the person facing the health crisis. Since the question is not about marriage, relationship, or the wife’s feelings, the wife is not the main subject. The husband becomes the subject of the reading.
In health cases, Mr. Dougles Chan explains that it is best to get the person’s birth year stem whenever possible. The birth-year stem gives a more accurate reference point for the person’s current condition. In this case, the man’s birth-year stem is Gui, so Gui is located in the chart and used to represent the husband.
Gui is found in Palace 6. Therefore, Palace 6 represents the husband. Palace 6 shows Open Door with Nine Earth. In a normal question, Open Door may have other meanings, but in this health context, Open Door with Nine Earth can suggest a very serious condition. It is a difficult sign when the person is already in a critical situation.
The next step is to check the Problem Star, which represents the illness or health issue. The Problem Star is also in Palace 6, together with Open Door and Nine Earth. This gives a second confirmation. The husband and the health problem are both pointing to the same serious palace.
The answer is then checked. The answer also appears in Palace 6, again showing the same Open Door and Nine Earth combination. This means the chart repeats the same message three times: the husband, the health issue, and the answer all point to Palace 6. When a chart repeats one message so strongly, the reading becomes much more direct.
The conclusion is that the situation does not look favorable from the chart. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that the heart attack is unlikely to be easily overcome. However, he also emphasizes that the words used in such a case must be very careful. A practitioner should not speak harshly to someone whose family member is in crisis.
Instead of saying something blunt, the message should be delivered with compassion. A softer way is to say that the situation does not look good, the family should hope for the best, and they should prepare emotionally. The purpose is not to create fear, but to help the family face reality with care.
Students then ask whether the wife’s relationship palace should be used because the man is her husband. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that in urgent health cases, we go straight to the subject. The wife is connected emotionally, but the medical outcome belongs to the husband. Unless the wife directly affects the result, the reading should focus on the husband.
The lesson also discusses doctor and TCM support. In health reading, Western doctor and TCM doctor can be checked to see whether they can control or clash the Problem Star. If they can properly control the problem, treatment may have stronger support. In this chart, neither route appears able to resolve the main problem effectively. For a heart attack, emergency hospital treatment is still the correct practical response.
Students also ask whether a destiny chart can provide more accuracy. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that the destiny chart gives the larger health pattern, while the divination chart shows the immediate situation and timing. If full birth details are available, both systems can be used together for deeper analysis.
The conversation then moves into intention and karma. Students ask whether it is wrong to check when an elderly or sick person may pass. Mr. Dougles Chan explains that intention matters. If the purpose is to prepare, spend meaningful time, arrange care, or help the family make compassionate decisions, the intention is different from using the information for selfish or harmful reasons.
A practitioner must also be careful about taking cases where the asker may have hidden motives. If the intent feels wrong, the safest choice is to decline the case. You can simply say that you cannot help with that situation.
This lesson teaches Qi Men Dun Jia students to identify the correct subject in a third-party health question, why birth-year stem is useful, how to read repeated serious indicators, how to check doctor support, how to combine divination and destiny reading, and why sensitive health answers must be delivered with compassion.
To learn Qi Men Dun Jia directly from Mr. Dougles Chan, click the link below:


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